2nd Test (D/N), Brisbane, December 04 - 08, 2025, The Ashes
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Can England rise to pink-ball challenge in Brisbane?

Australia find themselves in a familiar position: 1-0 up for the fourth home Ashes series in a row

Andrew Miller
Andrew Miller
03-Dec-2025 • 1 hr ago

Big picture: A big day three beckons for the Ashes

From two days of Ashes insanity, to two weeks of Ashes inanity. Rarely has the dead time between Tests felt so rich in promise, yet filled with pointlessness, as in this past fortnight. From that hyperactive 19-wicket opening gambit in Perth and the shock and awe of Travis Head's romp to victory, we've since been pitched headlong into a waffle-filled void, fuelled by an Ashes hype-machine that had been in overdrive from the start of November, but has since been in desperate need of red-hot takes to slake its thirst for narrative.
In the absence of actual action, we've had talk of beer matches and food mountains from the peeved executives at the Optus; we've had pontification about the value of pink-ball practice matches from a cast of ex-Ashes combatants (whom Ben Stokes is now adamant are not "has-beens" after all). And in Brisbane this week, we've even had talk of potential fines for England's scooter-based traffic violations. Thursday's resumption of hostilities under the Gabba floodlights will surely be sweet release for two sets of players who have heard enough yakking, and will now be ready to get back to some hard yakka.
What have we learned in this impatient lull? Not a whole lot, if truth be told. In spite of the speed of their meltdown, England still competed more gamely in Perth than in any Test in Australia since their victorious tour in 2010-11. If they get the better of the conditions in what Stuart Broad has described as a pink-ball "lottery", they could yet restore the optimism with which they launched this campaign. If they do not, or if they bat as frivolously as they did in that crucial post-lunch passage of play on day two, a third 5-0 whitewash in six tours could already be loading. Choose your path, there'll be plenty opportunities to retro-fit your narrative come the end of the Sydney Test.
For the time being, it's a chastened (if not reformed) England that has regrouped at the Gabba. This Ashes tour has been front and centre of their planning for three-and-a-half years, right from the inception of the so-called Bazball project, and they'll know - notwithstanding their fightback from 2-0 down in 2023 - that they cannot afford another false start. There was nervous energy in spades in Perth, and while that translated wonderfully well into a kinetic frenzy with the ball in the first innings, even the most pigheaded advocate of England's no-consequences mindset would acknowledge that the loss of 20 wickets in less than 70 overs was a dereliction of batting duty.
As for Australia, they were scarcely any less shocked by what they witnessed in Perth - although the sight of Head launching Jofra Archer for a back-foot six over long-on might have been a key contributor to that. Amid the chaos caused by Usman Khawaja's back spasm, and the unsatisfactory compromise that forced Marnus Labuschagne to open in the first innings, Head's subsequent promotion proved a masterstroke. It met England's go-getting attack head-on, and challenged them in the same manner that Yashasvi Jaiswal had done in his own six-laden onslaughts in India two years ago. If Bazball is all in the mind, then Head was in England's heads by the end of that innings, rather than vice versa.
England's chosen route back to parity has already taken an interesting turn. Mark Wood reported soreness in his knee after a wicketless display in Perth and is out of the reckoning - who knows for how long, although his fitness for flatter decks to come (particularly in Adelaide) could yet be as much of a priority as the here-and-now. But into his place comes not another seamer, nor the primary spinner Shoaib Bashir (who had been England's designated 12th man in the first Test), but the each-way-bet option of Will Jacks, a selection that smacks, ever so slightly, of a team second-guessing themselves.
It's an interesting predicament that leans into the vacuousness of the discourse since Perth. So much of England's mindset-led approach has been about blocking out the noise and doubling down on positive reaffirmation from within the dressing-room walls - the logic being that, if you believe that the team has your back no matter what, then you already own your half of the mental battle.
But never before has this England team encountered noise quite like this - a 24/7 media bombardment that will surely have seeped into their subconscious decision-making, even if they are overtly still as bold as brass. Batting more sensibly at key moments, for instance, may be a pre-requisite for this Ashes fightback, but if that comes at the expense of bravery, then what will that do for their over-arching ethos? Scott Boland's decisive burst in the second innings at Perth was arguably a case in point, after he'd been taken at more than six an over in the first, while Stokes has already admitted his captaincy was found wanting when Head started teeing off in the run-chase. It's hard to imagine, for instance, that he'll dare to declare after 60 overs to get bowling in the twilight, as was the case when England won their most recent pink-ball Test in Mount Maunganui two years ago.
Australia, meanwhile, are in a happy and familiar position in this series: 1-0 up, for the fourth home Ashes in a row, and heading into a format in which their record is unparalleled, both in terms of volume of matches and victories secured. But, thanks in no small part to England tripping over their own feet when well set, they know they were spared a deeply uncomfortable denouement in that first Test. The onus is on the visitors to finish the inquisition they started, before it's too late for beg for third chances.

Form guide

Australia: WWWWL (last five Tests, most recent first)
England: LLDWL

In the spotlight: Mitchell Starc and Joe Root

The story hasn't changed for Mitchell Starc, but the expectations have been ramped up an extra notch. At Perth, he was the last man standing of the greatest pace trio of the modern era, and he responded supremely, with a career-best 7 for 58 and ten wickets in the match. Now, he's been asked to do so again, in a form of the game in which he is simply without equal. His 81 wickets in day-night Tests include a startling haul of 6 for 9 in his most recent outing, as West Indies were routed for 27 in Kingston in July. If he makes the pink ball talk as loudly as it can do under the Gabba floodlights, there'll be plenty more where that came from. Starc has a chance to put the Ashes beyond realistic reach, before Pat Cummins and Josh Hazlewood have even bowled a ball in anger.
There's no ducking the issue for Joe Root any more. If his team are to turn their fortunes around in this series, then England's greatest run-scorer desperately needs to come to the party. Notwithstanding Zak Crawley's pair, Root's performance in Perth was arguably the most culpable among many failures in that first Test, in particular his skittish second-innings drive that capped England's post-lunch collapse. His scores of 0 and 8 did little to dial down the pre-series chat about his modest record in Australia, and were perhaps an indication of the very real nerves he felt coming into a legacy-defining campaign. Now, however, he needs his vast experience to steer his team's agenda. Of all the ways that England might have envisaged losing in Australia, Root going missing was not among them.

Team news: Jacks in, Khawaja out

Usman Khawaja's failure to recover from a back spasm has arguably spared Australia an awkward decision, seeing as his inability to open at Perth was what enabled Travis Head to stride up to the top of the order and turn the first Test on its head. Head now seems likely to retain his role alongside Jake Weatherald, with Josh Inglis looking set to slot into the gap in the middle order: his prowess against short-pitched bowling might be the clincher, with Beau Webster again unlucky to miss out. There's still no absolute clarity on Pat Cummins, who remains with Australia's squad and even batted in the nets on Tuesday, but he is not officially part of their squad for this Test as he continues his return from a back injury.
Australia (probable): 1 Jake Weatherald, 2 Travis Head, 3 Marnus Labuschagne, 4 Steven Smith (capt), 5 Josh Inglis, 6 Cameron Green, 7 Alex Carey (wk), 8 Mitchell Starc, 9 Nathan Lyon, 10 Scott Boland, 11 Brendan Doggett.
With Wood ruled out due to a knee issue, Jacks is the surprise inclusion in England's XI. He comes into the side as England's frontline spin option, ahead of Bashir, whose consistent selection over the past two years had seemingly been with a view to him playing a central role in this Ashes campaign. Instead, England have opted for the insurance that Jacks' significantly better batting provides at No. 8, while hoping that his offspin can front up for England as it did on debut at Rawalpindi, three years ago to the week, when his six first-innings wickets proved crucial to a famous win over Pakistan. In part, it is a reflection of the "lottery" of the pink-ball Test - and given Jacks' ongoing rebirth as a No. 7 in the ODI team, he could yet play some hybrid "finisher" role in a typically fast-paced innings - but it is a rare case of England hedging their bets in the Bazball era, rather than going all-in on a preferred strategy.
England: 1 Zak Crawley, 2 Ben Duckett, 3 Ollie Pope, 4 Joe Root, 5 Harry Brook, 6 Ben Stokes (capt), 7 Jamie Smith (wk), 8 Will Jacks, 9 Brydon Carse, 10 Gus Atkinson, 11 Jofra Archer.

Pitch and conditions

Curator Dave Sandurski said on Tuesday that he would leave 3mm of grass on the pitch, and the familiar green tinge may fade away under the Queensland sun. Despite some spicy practice pitches in the Gabba nets, there is a suggestion this track could be on the slow side, and with the current batch of Kookaburra balls reportedly going soft quickly, that could spell hard times for fielding sides if either team can keep wickets in hand heading into 50-60 overs. That said, England couldn't bat beyond 35 on either occasion at Perth. New-ball swing, under the floodlights, is sure to be a feature at some stage of the contest.

Stats and trivia

  • Australia have won 13 and lost one of their 14 pink-ball Tests to date.
  • All but one of these (their most recent, against West Indies in July) came on home soil, including each of their three wins against England in the Ashes, at Adelaide (in 2017-18 and 2021-22) and Hobart (2021-22).
  • However, their solitary defeat in a day/night Test came at the Gabba, against West Indies in January 2024.
  • England, by contrast, have lost five of their seven pink-ball Tests to date, although they did win their most recent, against New Zealand in Mount Maunganui in February 2023.
  • Starc, with 81 wickets at 17.08 in 14 Tests, has almost twice as many pink-ball wickets as the next most prolific bowlers, Pat Cummins and Nathan Lyon (both 43 at 17.34 and 25.62 respectively), and nine times as many as the most experienced bowlers in England's squad, Mark Wood and Joe Root (nine each).
  • Starc needs three more wickets to overtake Wasim Akram as the most prolific left-arm fast bowler in Test history.
  • Quotes

    "They've said for a while they're not going to really change the way they go about their business. I don't expect too much different."
    Steven Smith is not anticipating a change of approach from England in Brisbane.
    "Many teams have gone to the Gabba and lost to Australia, but this is a brand new outfit. Lots of guys are on their first Ashes tours, so this is going to be a new experience for them... It doesn't hold too much fear."
    Ben Stokes is not concerned by England's winless streak in Brisbane, which dates back to 1986.

    Andrew Miller is UK editor of ESPNcricinfo. @miller_cricket